VA program practical model for Medicare
11-26-05
From:
Waspscpo@aol.com [mailto:Waspscpo@aol.com]
Sent: Friday, November 25, 2005 2:12 PM
To: undisclosed-recipients:
Subject: VA program practical model for Medicare
Posted on Wed, Nov. 23, 2005
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HEALTHCARE
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http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/opinion/13237920.htm
How does the program work?
The answer is: very simply.
Any veteran who is eligible to receive medical care in the national VA system is
eligible to receive prescriptions. And patients don't need to drive to a VA
pharmacy to have them dispensed. They can be refilled over the phone and sent in
the mail.
How much does all this cost?
For 100-percent, service-connected veterans and for those who qualify on the
basis of income, the medications are free. Nonservice-connected veterans must
pay only $7 per monthly prescription.
And what about the crucial objective of controlling costs?
The U.S. government can use its considerable buying power to negotiate the
best prices from drug companies.
As the nation's largest health care system, the VA negotiates some of the lowest
drug prices in the country. The new Medicare plan prohibits any such
negotiation, and its estimated costs are rising.
A patient or physician should be rightly concerned about which drugs are
covered under a prospective drug plan.
Many of the patients cared for in the VA system, just like Medicare patients,
are older and have multiple medical problems. To treat them properly, the list
of available drugs must be complete. Though the VA does not offer every drug on
the market, it does include a good selection, one that is determined by a
committee on which physicians and pharmacists are well represented.
As a VA physician, I may not be able to prescribe any drug I want, but I can
prescribe every drug I need.
And if a drug on that VA list isn't effectively treating a patient's blood
pressure or cholesterol or pain, a doctor may request another, ''nonformulary''
medication. Such requests are not immediately dismissed, but are given careful
consideration.
And, in my decade-long experience as a VA doctor, all medically reasonable
requests I have made have been granted.
Any system has its flaws, and the VA system is no exception. Filling
prescriptions late at night or on the weekend can be difficult. Under those
circumstances, using a private pharmacy or going to a VA Emergency Room are the
only real options.
For patients with limited incomes, those are not optimal alternatives.
Formularies are not exactly the same in each VA regional hospital network, so
patients who move or travel from one region to another might require that their
prescriptions be changed.
For those patients who receive some care in the private sector (for example, by
a specialist), their prescriptions from that physician need to be rewritten
before they can be filled by a VA pharmacy.
These flaws are not fatal, but currently require patience and flexibility, and
ultimately demand innovative solutions.
As it now stands, the VA program is practical and worthy of envy.
It can and should serve as a possible model for reengineering Medicare's
beleaguered drug benefit. And perhaps all those seniors might soon stop
scratching their heads in frustration.
Robert Kaiser, MD, is an associate professor of medicine at the University of
Miami.
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Contributed,
YNCS Don Harribine, USN(ret)